How is mental health connected to history? And what can one hospital teach us about it? In this new podcast miniseries from Partners In Health, doctors, patients and historians in Sierra Leone tell the story of Sierra Leone Psychiatric Teaching Hospital--the oldest psychiatric hospital in sub-Saharan Africa--which marked its 200th anniversary this year.
This miniseries will dive deep into Sierra Leone’s history--including slavery, colonialism and civil war--to explore how the past holds implications for mental health. Sierra Leone Psychiatric Teaching Hospital--once an impoverished facility that, due to lack of resources, used chains to keep patients from harming themselves and others--tells a story of both trauma and transformation: how the past never fully leaves, but can inform our present and future.
Subscribe to Unchain and get ready for the first episode to drop on October 17.
Those Who Feel It, Know It
What is the path forward from Sierra Leone Psychiatric Teaching Hospital--especially in the face of persistent stigma against mental health conditions? For a growing number of patients, the step after leaving inpatient care is to become a community health worker (CHW), providing support to those currently admitted to the hospital. To learn more about this new community health worker program, we talk with Dr. Abdul Jalloh, psychiatrist and medical superintendent of Sierra Leone Psychiatric Teaching Hospital, and Agness Sumaila and Hawa Kabia, two current CHWs whose work is helping them rebuild their lives.
5/29/2021 • 17 minutes, 51 seconds
Celebrate Mental Health Awareness Month with Unchain
May is Mental Health Awareness Month--a time to celebrate the strides made in mental health care around the globe, and to recommit ourselves to all the work that remains towards ensuring mental health care for all. In honor of Mental Health Awareness Month, we're listening back to Unchain, our podcast miniseries about the transformation of the oldest psychiatric hospital in sub Saharan Africa: Sierra Leone Psychiatric Teaching Hospital. Tune in each Saturday to hear from staff, patients, and historians of this remarkable hospital--and get ready for a new episode on May 29 covering recent updates from the hospital.
4/29/2021 • 3 minutes, 27 seconds
"How Will I Face My World?"
How can we fight deeply-engrained stigma around mental health—not just in Sierra Leone, but around the world? We speak with mental health nurse Julianna Showers and psychiatrist Dr. Abdul Jalloh to learn how Sierra Leone Psychiatric Teaching Hospital staff are working to promote awareness and respect around mental health conditions. And we speak with Aminata, a patient who received care at the hospital, who sheds light on the need for systemic transformation.
11/25/2020 • 17 minutes, 30 seconds
"My Level Best"
Sierra Leone Psychiatric Teaching Hospital has come a long way over the years--and that transformation has been both structural and personal. We speak with Annieru Braima, head nurse; Julianna Showers, mental health nurse; and Alpha Sesay, infrastructure lead for Partners In Health, to learn about how the hospital has grown from an impoverished, under-resourced facility into a dignified hospital providing quality mental health care to patients. Because renovation is about much more than improving a building—it can mark the start of a new era, for patients, communities, and a country.
10/31/2020 • 15 minutes, 24 seconds
Chains
How has history influenced how Sierra Leone Psychiatric Teaching Hospital was built--and how is this history still present within its walls? We hear from two clinicians--Dr. Edward Nahim, who for decades served as Sierra Leone’s only psychiatrist, and Anneiru Braima, head nurse at the hospital--to learn how historical trauma, systemic oppression, and poverty prevented the hospital from providing effective mental health care for years, and produced a facility "unfit for human accommodation."
10/24/2020 • 14 minutes, 17 seconds
Memory
Sierra Leone’s history--some of it centuries old, some of it within recent memory--is still relevant and impacting each of us, even across time and an ocean. We speak with Dr. Ismail Rashid, a scholar and professor of African history who grew up in Freetown, Sierra Leone, to learn about three key events that have shaped the country, especially in terms of mental health and mental health care: the Atlantic slave trade, British colonialism, and the civil war.
10/19/2020 • 17 minutes, 44 seconds
Teaser
How is mental health connected to history? And what can one hospital teach us about it? In this new podcast miniseries from Partners In Health, doctors, patients and historians in Sierra Leone tell the story of Sierra Leone Psychiatric Teaching Hospital--the oldest psychiatric hospital in sub-Saharan Africa--which marked its 200th anniversary this year.This miniseries will dive deep into Sierra Leone’s history--including slavery, colonialism and civil war--to explore how the past holds implications for mental health. Sierra Leone Psychiatric Teaching Hospital--once an impoverished facility that, due to lack of resources, used chains to keep patients from harming themselves and others--tells a story of both trauma and transformation: how the past never fully leaves, but can inform our present and future.Subscribe to Unchain and get ready for the first episode to drop on October 17.